HACKER Q&A
📣 t-writescode

General Mood of the Community


Has anyone else noticed that HN feels a lot more angry all around lately? There seems to be little peace or excitement in people's comments. It feels mostly like people attacking each other or attacking something.

I know the pandemic has been hard; but, we've got to fight to keep our peace through this and not attack others during this time, where we can.


  👤 dusted Accepted Answer ✓
I've only been active since 2019, I wouldn't say the tone has changed much, maybe there are waves, maybe it's just the ebb and tide of who are active when, which is outside-influenced by peoples general lives. Sometimes several of the more negative people will happen to be in a more active period at the same time..

That said, I think the tone on HN is fairly good, people are not sugarcoating things, they're not veiling their views with courtesy, and they're generally presenting arguments for consideration, and if insults are made, they're usually insults of ideas, not people.

So maybe I'm just in the "negative asshole camp" but I think it's very refreshing to have conversations on HN, because my views are often challenged, and I am forced to reconsider and adjust, while at the same time, I feel that my own points are being considered, rather than automatically discarded as is often the case in mainstream social media, where discussions are not had to find understanding or truth, but to "win".


👤 alangibson
My feeling is that mood-souring is universal, if unevenly distributed, across all communities. Part of it is lockdown, part is growing political divisions, and so on.

It's interesting that this post hits the front page on the same day that Facebook announces (admits to?) its first user drop. Everyone is just getting sick of being social online. From here on out, content is king.

In 10 years we'll look at the Facebook news feed as being the necessary intermediate step between Web 2.0 and whatever TikTok becomes.


👤 anthony_romeo
IMO The tone of HN comments is teetering over the edge of decorum, similar to the atmosphere of Reddit prior to every new nadir of commentary there.

I'm not going to look through rose-tinted glasses and suggest "things were better in the good ol' days". Contrarian reactions to top posts are the bread-and-butter of a healthy message board.

However, to me it feels like the quality of these contrarian takes have gone down. People seem far more 'committed' to pushing their positions to incense others with overgeneralizing karma-clickbait. This causes the dialectic to become more of a debate instead of a deliberation, and to me the latter is far more useful and engaging.

With that said, I also know that my tastes change as I get older, so this could truly be my own delusion.


👤 PragmaticPulp
Angry and low-effort comments became more common at the beginning of the pandemic. I can't find it now, but I recall dang (HN moderator) even commented on the shift.

I think as remote work has become more common, many engineers are reaching to social media sites like HN to fill the void left by previous in-person office banter. The good comments are still there, but it feels like more work than ever to find them among the noise. I've also noticed an increase in the number of familiar HN screen names that pop up with the same angry perspectives on every thread of certain hot topics (Facebook, economics, cloud hosting).

This effect isn't exclusive to HN. The signal-to-noise ratio of the public forums and Slacks/Discords I frequent has also taken a dive since the start of COVID.


👤 stiiv
I've been a lurker on HN for about a decade. This is literally the first comment that I have posted.

Part of the reason is: while I am thoughtful, reasonably well-informed individual, I never felt up to the task of putting in enough effort to create an HN-worthy comment. This was inspired almost entirely by the _quality_ of the kinds of comments that I saw over the years -- at least for the kinds of posts that drew my attention.

- Many (most?) of the comments were made by experts - They often included disclaimers, especially when the poster considered themselves an amateur - They often included sources and links - They were conspicuously respectful and humane - Meta-comments were productive, and typically stopped propagation of nastiness before it could take root

Often enough, comments would truly enrich the original post, and I was truly grateful for them.

This was a stark contrast with the subreddits that I frequented. (I gave up on reddit a few years when they changed the default format to be more attention-greedy.)

From what I've seen, HN has become increasingly noisy -- at times, it's angry -- but overall, it just feels loud and crowded.

For that reason, I've basically stopped reading comments at all, even if there is high-quality content in there. It is a damn shame.


👤 gus_massa
Avoid the posts with more than 100 comments.

Try to go to https://news.ycombinator.com/newest and find interesting small post. I like when they have like 10 comments, but sometimes they have no comments and you can have a nice conversation with the author or someone of the community of HN that is an expert in the subject. [Note: Most of the post in "newest" are not interesting. You must check it for a while until you find one.]


👤 ksec
HN becomes mainstream. It used to be those in the media would hide HN and stop direct linking. But then you cant hide it when decent information are coming out of it. I now have the habit of checking account's date, there has been lots of new account since 2018. My old account was 2010, and even then I waited two years before I registered because I was worry I will dilute down the overall quality. These days people seems to jump straight in.

We used to have very strict rules with jokes and puns, and try to limit it to the bare minimum. But those are on the rise as well.

Politics and Tech. There has never been an era where the two are so intertwined. Our everyday life has become digital. It is hard to ignore Google, Facebook, Amazon or Apple. And just like every aspect of politics, it gets ugly in a hurry. And that is just politics on Tech alone, not politics in general.

And unlike Engineering or Science, where we can discuss to death and get a decent consensus or conclusion. Such thing is rare in politics, especially on an online discussion forums.

Unpopular opinion, balance views and contrarian takes are harder to come by. And because it HN has becomes mainstream, these tends to get squashed and downvoted more than previous era.


👤 gwbas1c
I wonder if it's just a symptom of Hacker News getting more popular?

My theory is that, as a site grows, the quality of comments goes down. Perhaps it's because the site is harder to moderate when more people are on it? Perhaps it's because the attention drives in the loonies?

Personally, I really like how Hacker News is moderated. (Thanks Dang!)


👤 zwieback
Been on here since 2009 and it's always felt the same: vaguely rude but overall quite productive. However, I know better than to click on the comments section for a certain type of article.

👤 BobbyJo
I've noticed a trend across the internet at large that I think stems from the increase in junk information:

People have to be suspicious by default when it comes to information they see or hear online. More so over time. This has lead to the need for people to be increasingly defensive of their own views. There are two knock-on effects of this:

It's easy to click 'reply' without actually replying. When someone leaves a comment, they are trying to say something. When someone responds, they aren't necessarily responding to what the person is saying. Subsequently, people talk past each other, both not feeling heard, both increasingly entrenched in the own views because the other person isn't formulating actual replies to their message. If we perceive someone trying to rebut our ideas, but failing miserably to do so, we become really sure those ideas are good.

It's easy for defensiveness to turn into vitriol, because people tend to have conversations on the internet in a very off-the-cuff fashion, which doesn't lend itself to deep, considered, reasoning. It's very easy to miss, and subsequently ignore, holes in our arguments as we make them, and our suspicion prevents us from reconsidering them in the moment.


👤 dashundchen
Can't say if it's an increase over previous years but I do notice a lot of culture war posts. Topics are usually an endless repetition of cancel-culture/COVID/gender/trans debates that just devolve into flamewars. I watch "new" and notice it's frequently the same users who insist on bringing it up.

The comments have nothing novel to discuss, just endless rehashing of the same battles over and over. Guidelines warn against using the site to wage ideological battles, so I usually just flag and move on.


👤 BiteCode_dev
People around me in real life have been more angry in general, including friends and family.

And the internet is currently experiencing a huge dump in signal / noise rate, with the noise being full of anger, looking for something to complain about, a fight to pick, a clue something wrong has been done. And that's my feeling while I'm not on facebook, instagram, tik tok, don't have a google account and read a lot of technical stuff and blogs. I can't imagine what it is for the regular folk.

I believe this is partially because the media industry is now using internet as it used tv before, and the emotional engagement resulting is the same, only multiplied in speed and intensity.

But also because of the current tensions we have with covid, and the social, political and economical consequences.

And finally because, with all that stuff going on, there is a huge trust crisis in the world. We have been exposed to so much proofs of wrong doing and manipulation attempts lately nobody expect leaders, the medias or institutions to have good intentions nor be competent. PR telling you how good big corporations and their products have been overwhelming everything, including entertainment, news, and sites like HN.

Even the scientific world is washed out with so many bad studies, so much agenda, wrong incentives, bias and conflicts of interests the last line of defense of the intellect is getting attacked. It's not just your mum on facebook. And in a site like HN, this is kinda painful to live through.

So I think it's not far fetch to feel the mood is not at his best.


👤 jshaqaw
Not limited to Hacker News. Other forums I participate in have seen parallel shifts downward in civility. Some of it is generational. For better or worse younger generations often see strident online discourse as totally different than how you would treat a person irl. Older folks have less of a sense of separate worlds there.

In general anonymous commenting was cool for a while but seems to be leading to negative results most places. I’m ready to engage with forums limited to verified real people ex specific situations where personal safety might be at risk (and I’m not in any of those myself now or in the past).


👤 thrower123
I'm less interested in most of the topics that make the front-page these days. Covid, crypto, NFTs, security exploits, Tesla news, privacy, Apple products, scientific papers about health - none of this stuff is very interesting to me, and it's making up a bigger and bigger portion of what shows up. I flag most of those stories, and hide all of them. Therefore my front-page is maybe a subset of the top-100 stories, and they really tail off in activity once you get into stories that aren't on the normal front-page.

There's still some stuff I find cool, but I have to sift pretty hard, e.g.

Rust Wolf3D port - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30182565

Radix Sort - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30135440

Well... I went back two weeks in my upvoted submissions and that's about all I found, actually...


👤 0xbadcafebee
You can't really tell if HN is getting angrier or not, because you're just going off of your selective memory. All humans store and retrieve memories according to specific biases. This leads people to think that the past was better and that we're worse off now than we were before. Only by careful analysis do we find out that actually the present is much better than it's ever been.

It's more likely that the community never changed, but that you are changing. You may have become more sensitive over time, and now feel that anger more viscerally, and assume that this new feeling must be the community changing rather than yourself.

I know I've gotten both softer and harder over time. I can feel my reactions getting stronger, but I also try to shut up when I feel I'm about to react strongly. I've gotten a little better at making my words more diplomatic. But I'm really just as angry as I've always been :-)


👤 brimble
HN is extremely vulnerable to certain types of trolling (or certain types of bad posts that may be earnestly meant but are indistinguishable from trolling) and these can be coupled with a shitload of passive-aggression before moderators step in (often to censure the person who's finally had enough of that crap). Some of the choices made in the design of the community, like downplaying individual identity so reputations develop less easily (compare with, say, forums that prominently display images or signatures for users that are easy to distinguish at a glance and easier to remember thread-to-thread) and the very decorum-promoting rules themselves make it nearly impossible to do anything about this.

👤 asciimov
I think two things happen as online communities grow.

1. People, consciously or not, start forming their comments with upvotes in mind.

2. People realize that positive comments don't generate as much discussion as neutral or negative comments. Less discussion, less upvotes.


👤 indymike
A lot of the discussion here is just mirroring the times we live in. People are confused and scared about COVID, they are flummoxed by the wild west (which is over the top wild) in cryptocurrency/NFT land, and there's a lot of frustration with big tech companies. So, there really is a bit of disillusionment and sometimes the anger is real and justified (e.g. my app was banned after five years from Google Play/iTunes by an AI and there are no humans to help)... HN hasn't lost what makes it a great community: optimism abounds, people are generally encouraging when people take a risk (except that one guy who can't resist being the devil's advocate) lot of optimism, and most importantly, HN isn't a sounding chamber for some political group.

👤 bjourne
Hacker News has always been Nitpicker News but it may have been gotten worse lately. If you post something personal there's always someone there to take a cheap shot at you. If I write that I find Haskell difficult and complicated someone will reply that it is because I'm not smart enough and so on. One random example from something I posted two weeks ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29987132

Not that I'm better myself. HN's point system really favors knee-jerk reactions and one-liners: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30074128


👤 h2odragon
On the contrary, I see more rote apologia and formal protestations of faith and conformity than there used to be. The tone of commenters here encompass a wider range perhaps than other forums; we've got some excellent communicators with empathy and all that good stuff, and then some less social folks like me that hope to at least amuse if we cant actually communicate, and often fail to do even that.

I'd also submit that it's far more normal now than say 5 years ago for just the bare disagreement of what I said above to be perceived, by some, as me attacking you, the author of the OP. Which would be an erroneous conclusion as far as I'm concerned.


👤 marklubi
The site has slowly been turned to mostly clickbait headlines, and outrage comments. It's not just turned that way lately though, it's taken several years.

Things used to be hopeful and encouraging around here. It's not that way anymore.


👤 hodgesrm
I have noticed a couple of things lately about Hacker News that go to mood.

1. There seem to be more political topics appearing, for example around handling of COVID or effects of social networks on society. The best comments on these topics ferret out a priori assumptions or find real data to illuminate tradeoffs. But they tend to be drowned out by more shallow comments. I think that's in part because these issues are hard to discuss in a dispassionate way and most of us are simply not very good at it. I'm firmly in this camp, unfortunately.

2. HN commentary seems more predictable than it did a few years ago. For example, you post something about how a big company has changed licensing of software you'll likely get a fairly predictable (and long) discussion about the evils of capitalism. I don't think this is a real change. Some HN readers have a more binary view of the world than others and it has always been this way. I think I just notice it more.

I still think HN has some of the best commentary available on the web. For all the silly arguments we have (and that I have contributed to eagerly), you still get those gems where somebody who truly understands an issue deeply weighs in and tells it like it is. They have helped me understand countless articles that I would never have understood on my own. I love those comments and hope they never go away.


👤 codegeek
Pandemic has been really hard. I am a very social person who likes working with other people around me. I have been semi-depressed and now it is just way too long. So yea, it frikin sucks and I hate it. Not to mention I am a bootstrapped solo founder so loneliness is anyway a part of things for me. We are social animals by design (degree can vary).

I am angry (mostly at myself). Some of it due to the Pandemic itself. Some of it due to my inability to do better because of it and not in spite of it. I donno. It is hard. I try to be respectful online as much as possible but may be it shows sometimes.


👤 LesZedCB
my mood is generally more sour, tired, and insanely bored. mostly due to climate anxiety. pandemic fatigue is there still too, but not as much.

but we can't talk about climate shit because people either 1) don't wanna be depressed, 2) aren't willing to accept the rules of the New Climate Regime, 3) are concern trolls, 4) stuck in old, outdated political lines.

so it's just a slow motion death march into the future. fuck.


👤 cuspy
My opinion is that we are seeing a mass depoliticization across many if not all communities. Paradoxically, people are becoming less capable of engaging in political discourse, while clinging ever more tightly onto simple pieties and tribalistic lines in the sand. Ironically, this rigidity is perceived as people being "too political", because it manifests as an increase in anger and communication breakdown. In fact it's the opposite of political discourse.

When it comes to the pandemic, the immediate cause for this change, I think people also come out on either side of one basic disappointment. On one side, there are people who feel they've been massively betrayed by their fellow citizens who have not been cooperative or compliant with the recommendations of experts. On the other side, there are those who feel massively betrayed by regulatory institutions and media they feel are untrustworthy and captured by corporate interests, unelected health experts who have made policy misjudgements, and a wealthy class that has profited from the crisis that their institutions have exacerbated.

Although it's possible to recognize truth in both of the above sides, it is not common in the wild. The division is very primitive, having to do with our responsibilities to our fellow citizens, our relationship to authority, fundamental rights over our bodies, and the expectation of transparency in our institutions. You'd think we would be able to start from some shared assumptions and common ground on these issues, but it's almost impossible today to have discussion about it without one or both parties instantly devolving into anger, fatigue, frustration. We've lost the collective ability to even articulate one another's positions about the pandemic response and other basic civic issues, which is, I think, one of the few things that marks political discourse as different from base tribalism.

Given how effective we know "influence campaigns" to be, I don't think it's an accident that we've arrived here, but that's another issue altogether.


👤 jimbob45
It's 2022 - the year of a US election where the general sentiment is that all seats are up for grabs. IMO it seems to routinely get nasty in here during elections years.

The silver lining is that the nastiness typically narrows its scope to politically-based or politically-adjacent threads and the niche threads get even better. I swear I've never seen better discussion on Nim/Rust/Zig on here than I have in the last year. The guy on here advising us to stick to threads with < 100 comments is a genius.


👤 winternett
People are frustrated because their online experience is more frustrating than before. App updates, social media, and even entertainment options are all tightening their grip on revenue streams and profit, which makes online experiences far more frustrating without most people knowing that it's occurring.

Also, opportunity is still being twisted by corporations to prevent employee advancement and growth as "pushback" to economic protests going on right now.

There is also fatigue from our current world-wide pandemic to where people aren't communicating and social as they were prior.

All of these things are manifesting in our daily experiences, and when combined with intentionally limited tools where people can communicate and express themselves and in normally encountering negative discourse online, many people are becoming even more and more aggravated, triggered, and aggressive towards each other as a result online and in real life.

Our user experiences are a major issue now that we rely so much on software and now that they have almost all been corrupted by monetization, inundated by advertisements, and limited because they've scaled too far to truly be useful to us as individuals.

It may sound like doom and gloom, but that worry goes away if you turn the tech off and go outside and talk to real people without all of the feckless apps and overpriced hardware involved.

We need to stop letting corporations and individuals over-run the Internet for financial gain and bring tech back down to earth so that everyone can thrive, not just the wealthy and popular few.


👤 poulsbohemian
I'm not convinced it's pandemic related. Over time, the signal to noise ratio of any public group decreases, or else it turns into an oligarchic gated community. I keep a kind of running list of users with whom I've had conflict, and I've come to the conclusion that either:

1) There are a whole lot of bot type accounts here, developed over many years.

2) The "Endless September" effect has brought down the level of discourse.

Wish I could get my hands on a larger data set than what I've been able to collect manually, but I can't help but notice in my casual sampling that there are a large number of user accounts here that have been created within approximately the past 6 years that have very low karma, float in and out over weeks and months (IE: not regular commenters) and who when they do show up, act in deliberately negative and aggressive ways, often posting bursts of comments in short order. It's very bot-like.

The other thing I've noticed is that even the crowd that I can identify as human, has changed considerably over the decade. It seems to me like in the past there were a lot more entrepreneurs and technical people with significant seniority. It feels like the age of the crowd is much younger now, and let's be blunt... there are reasons that stereotypes exist around 20-something techie young (predominantly) men as being arrogant and having few social graces. In this regard, HN has become a reflection of its commenters.

If I could find another place with the diversity of interesting topics found here, I'd go elsewhere. The discourses here is seldom pleasant, and hasn't been for a number of years. It's a step above what Slashdot was back in the day, but not by much.


👤 throwaway22032
Prior to 2020 I worked as a software developer in an office.

Post-2020 it looks as if I never will again because my job has gone and been replaced with something else.

It doesn't surprise me that Hacker News is different - _being a hacker is different_.

It's now been seperated apart from other jobs in society even more - you can look at charts and see that software has basically gone all in on WFH where other office-based jobs have been much more measured.


👤 TameAntelope
Nearly every time I feel this way, it's not a trend I'm noticing, but something within myself that's coloring my interactions.

So you are possibly more angry when interacting with HN lately, or are interpreting more things that aren't angry as angry.

Take a few weeks away from HN entirely. It can become addicting, it's often good to seek time apart from any source of anger in your life.


👤 MattGaiser
I have noticed this with startup discussion, although I cannot really blame people.

A lot of it seems to be formerly excited about startups people screwed over by bad management in one way or another who now are happy to hang out at FAANG and focus on money.

I get it. My last employer made a lot of their employees want to join large companies and focus on stuffing their pockets rather than caring about any higher goal.


👤 sillysaurusx
It’s illusory. The feeling is as old as the hills.

If you want to see some real aggressive behavior, look at HN during its first year. I was shocked. My rose tinted glasses made year one look a lot nicer than it was.


👤 badrabbit
I am sorry but I have not seen that. Are there example threads you can point to? This is the one place where I see reasonable arguments. Of course, like reddit if you say anything controversial reason is out the window and I have seen CCP ..."advocates" (to avoid inflamatory language) on controversial threads but a well thought out and reasoned comment I make gets a healthy response and when I fail to do so, not so much.

I really have to question this sentiment and wonder if confirmation bias and bandwaggon effect are at play here. I was commenting the other day how HN makes it hard to convey emotion to begin with due to pure-text and no-emoji or text-speak etiquette. Some people may consider a strong disagreement angry but in reality there is nothing more healthier for a group than for people to be comfortable to voice their disagreement strongly(but respectfully).

I don't buy the angry part unless there is also disrespect in there somewhere.


👤 biztos
I’m sorry your experience has been negative, and I realize people are more on edge almost everywhere than they were three years ago.

I haven’t noticed much change at HN, but then I tend to skim over the reactionary bits, and when I myself fail to be constructive I reliably get the karma hit I deserve.

One topic on which I have noticed a lot of outright hostility is “crypto” — but part of why I come to HN is for the deep experience of many of its members, and that includes calling out intellectual dishonesty, so I don’t exactly weep for the 0.01% of Cryptolandia (including mine of course!) that is Legit.

It looks to me like HN is still working as designed, in good and bad ways, and the good far outweighs the bad for my use case. I also think it would compare favorably to its competitors, but HN has become my /. so much that I don’t really check other industry aggregators/forums.


👤 solatic
The culture of the HN comment section has pretty much always been deeply contrarian. "Why are you building something so complicated when you can do X which is so much simpler?"

Obligatory reference to the infamous Dropbox comment: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9224

The day HN stops helping me see the opposing viewpoint will be a sad day indeed. With that said, there is clear distinction between opposition and opprobrium, and yes, sometimes there's the latter here... but I don't feel it as much.


👤 Taylor_OD
I've been on since mid 2015, and it feels about the same as it always has? There are a lot of curmudgeons in the world. They seem to be prevalent in tech. They seem to be drawn toward forums where they can be a curmudgeon and at worst they get down voted.

This is all my opinion but apart from dang doing some type of pull to see if more comments have been reported I don't know how you can get anything other than anecdotal responses here.

When I run into a curmudgeon and don't want to deal with them, I just move on.


👤 tenpoundhammer
I think there are more people, so there are many more problems. Policing, downvoting, and removing low-value content is generally done by a small number of people. The number of issues has increased faster than the number of people helping to solve them. Dang does excellent work, but it takes a certain percentage of the community to keep things in check.

Edit fixed spelling mistake


👤 lstodd
You say it yourself --- "but, we've got to fight to ..." basically not fight.

No, we don't, it's that simple.

EDIT: If you have to fight in order to not fight, you have already lost the fight to not fight. Cute, ain't it?

The situation is somewhat reflected in the phrase from the Trainspotting: "I choose not to choose ~whatever~. I choose something else".


👤 motohagiography
There's a lot going on the background, and HN is a respite from it. To even identify the tension and articulate it is to make a partisan provocation that will cascade into a flame war and remove value from the site and the experience. Sustaining that level of meta and abstraction is a heavy intellectual lift that almost everyone is capable of but it takes more energy than a reaction, so asking everyone to make it is probably unreasonable.

What a difficult spot to be in to preserve an internal sense of normal when everything outside it is changing so quickly. I am not neutral at all, and am radical probably in every direction, and nor am I somehow above any of it, but even with the all underlying tension from world events I won't address directly, I don't think any of us will regret any effort we make individually to preserve the relative calm in places like this for its own sake.


👤 andrewljohnson
Someone should run sentiment analysis on all the comments over time and see if there's anything changing.

👤 blooalien
Compared to other sources I've used for tech (and other interesting) news, the discussions here are positively civilized on average, even when folks disagree. Sure, sometimes some folks (even me) get a bit "cranky" over certain topics, but I generally more often than not see even those sorts of "grumpy old man" comments get responded to with a great deal more civility here than many other places on the web where I could find similarly interesting posts. It's one of the main reasons HN has become one of my favorite sources of news-like content.

👤 causi
I've observed less flagging but more downvote brigading. In my own comments I've noticed they tend to pick up a lot of votes in the first hour but by the next day they'll be in the negatives.

👤 TigeriusKirk
Maybe people are posting drunk more often now that they're "working from home." I'm half kidding, but it might explain a lot of what you see happening on the internet these days.

👤 koonsolo
I really hate the cryptocurrency discussions here.

We finally have internet money. No bankers or governments creating this, but nerds and algorithms creating currency and a whole transaction system, out of nothing. The thing lives 100% on the internet.

And all the complainers on "hacker" news bashing it to the ground. I used to check HN every day, but the "hacker" and "entrepreneur" stuff is getting thinner and thinner.

But hey, I said something positive about cryptocurrency, so do your thing.

edit: I see I'm here since 2010. Maybe 12 years is enough.


👤 Stronico
Maybe I've just gotten better at what I follow/comment on, but the mood feels like it's gotten a bit better over the past few years, more tolerant, more heterdox, less shrill, more interesting, less combative, less "performative", etc. Not perfect, but improving over a few years ago. It does feel like the average age of the commenter has increased though.

👤 poorjohnmacafee
Certainly SV (and consequently YC) in recent years has become perhaps the most politicized it's ever been, along with many other parts of the US.

Many top comments here often have overt political bias on a range of topics, including the pandemic. I find it irritating, I'm sure others do too. As a result I spend much less (20% ish) the amount of time on HN that I used to say 8-3 years ago.


👤 sergiotapia
been here since 2012, i haven't noticed any particular changes in the discourse now vs back then. this post you just made, in like a recurring thing. someone is always asking this.

same with the "I remade a frontend for HN" someone always posts one. hell, i even made one a long time ago haha


👤 foxfluff
I've left a few accounts behind over the years due to frustration with the community. So I'd say it's always had its problems. It's very hard to quantify whether there's been an overall change in any direction. Feels about the same as always to me.

👤 fouc
I doubt there's been any significant change in mood. Truly negative stuff gets downvoted or flagged. I think it's mostly going to come down to your perception of things, unless you've been unlucky and happened to read all the wrong comments.

👤 RickJWagner
Not what I've noticed.

I'd say we're at mid-level anger. It slowly builds in an election year, culminating after everyone's self-selected media biases have convinced them they are under attack from their political twins across the aisle.


👤 mrfusion
This is a good conversation to have. I’ve been noticing it too.

Part of it is the general culture where disagreements aren’t allowed anymore. Anyone who doesn’t agree with you is a bad person. I blame the media trying to divide us.


👤 basisword
I haven’t noticed much of a change recently (last 1-2 years). I’ve been active for over a decade though and the mood has changed considerably since the “old days”. I feel like making money, building companies, and capitalism in general are frowned upon in the comments. 10 years ago that was very much celebrated here. The mood seems to mirror general society and I can’t figure out if that’s because many more people are on HN now (and therefore it’s more representative) or because the whole startup boom has passed, the OG Web 2.0 companies are now behemoths and the excitement is gone. People seem way more cynical and negative.

👤 bun_at_work
Some things on HN seem to have become more polarizing over the years I've been browsing this forum. Some examples include blockchain (and all related technologies) and anything related to Elon Musk. Both are tech-related, so frequently appear, but the conversation around both has become more polarizing, and I think we see that on HN.

In most threads involving those topics you find skeptics arguing with proponents. In general, this discussion is what we want on HN, however, due to the polarization, it comes off as more angry/intolerant/reductionist/etc.

That's my 2c.


👤 paulpauper
Covid has contributed to this I would think

👤 LoveGracePeace
In the US, it feels like the years under the Carter administration, malaise, high gas prices, inflation. These things weigh heavily on everyone's minds regardless where they stand on matters of society like politics or religion. Strong leadership yields positive and negative results, hopefully the balance is positive. Weak leadership yields malaise, which is worse than negative results, it's regressive.

👤 nicbou
I haven't noticed such a change. The comments are generally polite, even if often critical.

👤 tummybug
This is most evident in any post that mentions cryptocurrency or anything in anyway related.

👤 time_to_smile
Hacker News has an extreme problem with cognitive dissonance as the collapse of industrial society becomes harder and harder to ignore. Pandemic is just a mild symptom of this, the increasing impact of climate change is a much more severe one.

The trouble is that tech and the startup community in general derive much of their meaning from the idea that "tomorrow will be better". Nearly all programmers that I know, got into the field because of what they dream it could be tomorrow. There is an implicitly understanding that the things we build today are just the foundation for a brighter future.

In a more practical, less ideological sense, the entire startup/VC ecosystem depends on tomorrow being better and brighter since everything we are doing is leveraged against the future, literally. If the future were to be worse than today, that would ultimately fall apart.

However, as the signs that the future is dimming become more apparent, the vast majority of the HN community are forced into a position of existential angst that they are not prepared for.

This leads to a general increase in hostility about any topic related to a changing world. People will lose their minds in discussions about remote work (especially people who want to return to "normal", discussion of pandemic is filled with people who don't want to vaccinate or wear masks as a means of denying the pandemic is happening, climate change articles are filled with denial comments almost immediately, and very offend flagged off the home page very quickly.

Many members of this community are under extreme stress and anxiety because a reality they don't want to see continues to creep in. The result of this an angrier more agressive, more scared community.


👤 k__
Could be, HN gets more angry if a topic HN dislikes gets more hype in the media.

👤 peruvian
People come to forums to blow off steam, complain, and get their opinion out.

👤 travisporter
Since covid started, I've been consciously avoiding the comments of anything political or covid-related, and I've not noticed any change in tone or constructive criticism. Dunning-Kruger i guess?

As an aside, I also stop reading after "I think it's funny..." or "Interesting that..." because it's usually something very passive-aggressive


👤 ziggus
Are you sure you're not just experiencing a bit of Baader–Meinhof?

👤 raintrees
I noticed a shift years ago, only exacerbated with the recent fears.

👤 dboreham
Haven't noticed this, but perhaps I avoid the relevant threads.

👤 friendlydog
It could be the storm stage of Form, Storm, Norm, Perform.

👤 tomcam
I don’t sense the extra anger myself.

👤 errantmind
The general type of person on HN is more rigid-minded than a decade ago. They are less interested in exploring new ideas and more about the status quo. None of these people actually believe this about themselves, but it is obvious when reading through the comments. These people also tend to get increasingly bitter over time, which fuels a lack of curiosity and a shallow, dismissive attitude. I find these people to be lame and look to escape them whenever possible.

👤 Neil44
Maybe it’s time for an Erlang purge.

👤 nathanaldensr
Hacker News is not a singular person; however, there is a small but extremely vocal minority that insists on picking fights, yelling about "Republicans" (ambiguous collective), calling people names (anti-vaxxer, Nazi, fascist, etc.) with impunity. The thing is, the vitriol only works if you let it. Some people are angry, like being angry, and want to be angry all the time. The reasons they're angry change with the political winds, but the underlying current of energy remains.

I don't think most people on HN are angry. You're just affected more by angry comments than rational, calm ones. It's an emotional bias. This is why it's important to not use social media for the vast majority of one's time; angry people have a way of creating more angry people around them.


👤 alexashka
No.

This isn't a community at all by the way, unless you want to broaden the definition to include anyone who chooses to wear socks, a sock wearing community.


👤 swalsh
I'm going to be honest, since discovering Web3, i've been super happy. There's so much potential to mine I just haven't been able to stop thinking about it. The vast landscape of opportunity makes me so happy to wake up and build. I haven't felt like this since 2010.

👤 kerneloftruth
10 years ago, I would think to myself "Man, it feels like we're headed for a civil war"; but, I didn't say anything as I wrote it off to being too focused on the present-term context. I compared the times to the 1960s, when there was a lot of unrest and division. 5 years ago, though, things seemed even worse, and I began wondering out loud if we're headed for civil war.

Now, I think we're closer than ever to a real split. Covid has exacerbated it all. People are self-sorting in terms of migrations from blue states to red states, and from cities to suburbs and rural areas.

This summer, and the elections in November, could be flashpoints of something larger and worse -- I hope we can hold it together.

As for HN toxicity -- beware items whose number of comments exceeds the votes for the article itself; it's a rough metric for how big the flames are.


👤 PaulHoule
I see a continuous assault from alt-right and SJW people who want to push anti-vax, anti-woke, complaints about cancel culture and also negativity around race and gender (but never class) that conflate the personal and political with a self-centered and unempathetic viewpoint.

(Not to deny that systemic racism is real: one book about the Watts riot pointed out that many black people lived in communities where they didn't see a lot of white people and thus got distorted ideas of 'white privilege' because they never saw white people on TV who had real life troubles.)

Before Trump I thought the SJW contingent was worse but now the right-wing special snowflakes who think they have something so precious to say about why BLM sucks that they've got the right to shove it down our throats are insufferable.

These sides both agree that: (1) they are victims, and (2) specifically victims of a conspiracy that controls Hacker News. They're terribly offended that their posts get flagged and even offended that their comments get downvoted. If there wasn't downvoting to complain about they'd probably complain that their comments aren't getting upvoted.

Personally I flag anything about "X is being censored by Y" unless Y is the People's Republic of China. In a world where we're overwhelmed with spam, disinformation campaigns and disingenuous communications the rallying cry that "free speech" means somebody has to give you a printing press for free just doesn't ring true.